Sourabh Chandrakar Vehemently Denies Accusation in the Mahadev App Scam

DELHI, India, Oct. 12, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Mr. Sourabh Chandrakar, who has recently faced grave accusations related to the Mahadev Application, strongly asserts that he has no involvement whatsoever in the alleged financial fraud scheme. He deeply regrets being wrongly implicated and depicted as the orchestrator behind this operation.

He firmly states that these allegations lack any foundation and are an effort to smear the good standing of an upstanding citizen. He emphasizes that enjoying a comfortable lifestyle should not be misconstrued as evidence of his engagement in unlawful activities.

The individuals urge all media outlets to consider these facts, rectify the prevailing narrative, and direct resources toward the actual wrongdoers. He is committed to offering his complete cooperation to the authorities to ensure justice is served and the truth prevails untarnished. He urges a fair and unbiased investigation into the matter, emphasizing his commitment to cooperating fully to bring the actual perpetrators to justice.

About Sourabh Chandrakar

In India, Saurabh Chandrakar's business "Juice Factory" has 25 branches all over Bhilai, Chhattisgarh.

He hails from a humble background and has been running various FMCG, construction, sub–contracting and development–related businesses in the Middle East along with various partners and brands.

His entrepreneurial stint in the Middle East is "Empire One Global Real Estate' wherein he enjoys the position of Co–Managing Director. Both Mr. Uppal and Mr. Chandrakar have been creating value beyond real estate for their clients based out of the Middle East and globally.

*Source: NewsBeatWire

Contacts:
Saurabh Chandrakar
00447723436941


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 1000843938)

Turning Trash into Education: Lagos Children Benefit from Plastic Waste School

By Sam Olukoya
LAGOS, Nigeria, Oct 12 2023 (IPS-Partners)

Ijora Badia, a slum in Lagos, was swimming in plastic waste. Now children pay their school fees in plastic bottles, and these are used to build classrooms.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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It’s Time to Close the Sustainable Energy Gaps in Asia & the Pacific

Credit: ESCAP

By Armida Salsiah Alisjahbana
BANGKOK, Thailand, Oct 12 2023 – This year we pass the halfway mark both on our journey towards implementing the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the 17 Sustainable Development Goals, and the signing of the Paris Agreement on climate change.

Asian and Pacific countries have seen mixed progress on both. One of the most pressing challenges is the transition to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all, as encapsulated by SDG 7.

Without a significant acceleration of effort, reaching SDG 7 and its targets for energy access, renewable energy and energy efficiency will elude our region. Given the significance of Asia and the Pacific in terms of global energy supply and consumption, actions taken here will set the tone for the global trajectory of progress on SDG 7 and the fight against climate change.

The United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) will place these issues at center stage during next week’s (19-20 October) Asian and Pacific Energy Forum. This meeting will provide a platform for the region’s energy ministers to plan a regional agenda for a sustainable energy transition.

https://www.unescap.org/events/2023/APEF3

Looming large among these issues is the lack of access to electricity and clean cooking fuels for hundreds of millions of people. This deprivation has far-reaching consequences, and is a harsh reminder that, while the region has made significant strides in economic development, not everyone has enjoyed the fruits of progress.

Lack of access to electricity hinders healthcare, education and economic opportunities. Moreover, the reliance on traditional cooking fuels such as fuelwood contributes to respiratory diseases that disproportionately affect women and children. Energy poverty exacerbates existing inequalities, trapping communities in a cycle of deprivation.

To bridge the energy gap and promote climate-friendly sustainable development, increasing renewable energy and energy efficiency is an imperative. The transition to renewables opens avenues for economic growth and job creation.

Energy efficiency lowers the need for new supplies, relieves pressures on our energy systems, increases productivity and reduces waste, simultaneously saving money for households and businesses. Together, renewable energy and energy efficiency foster energy security.

Realizing the SDG 7 targets requires increased financial flows. According to the Secretary-General’s Global Roadmap for Accelerated SDG Action, annual investments in access to electricity must increase by $35 billion and by $25 billion for clean cooking by 2025.

A tripling of renewable energy and energy efficiency investment is needed by 2030. Scaling up finance at this rate requires a large infusion of private finance to bolster insufficient public sources, alongside a shifting of national budgets away from fossil fuels. Carbon pricing mechanisms can incentivize businesses to transition towards cleaner energy solutions. Innovative business models and financial instruments can attract international finance. But for these to be successful, governments must provide predictable and enabling policy environments.

To ensure the stability of the energy transition over the long term, governments must keep an eye on over-the-horizon risks. Key among these is the ensuring and adequate, stable and predictable supplies of critical raw materials needed to construct the millions of solar panels, wind turbines and batteries of the future.

Our region holds immense potential for critical raw materials production, making it a key player in the global energy transition. However, regional collaboration is needed alongside responsible mining and extraction practices that minimize environmental damage and social disruptions. Moreover, investing in recycling of critical raw materials can reduce our consumption of finite resources.

While transitioning towards clean energy is a moral and environmental imperative, a just transition ensures that no one is left behind as countries move away from fossil fuels and towards sustainable resources and technologies. This includes reskilling and reemployment opportunities for workers in declining industries, as well as community support to mitigate the socio-economic impacts of the energy
transition.

Achieving SDG 7 requires a multifaceted approach. This is not a challenge that any one country or sector can solve in isolation; it demands collaboration, innovation and shared responsibility. As we reflect on our progress at this halfway point, it is timely for countries across Asia and the Pacific to recommit to a regional vision where all citizens have access to clean and modern energy and the full potential of renewables and energy efficiency are realized.

The momentum behind these changes is growing and the opportunity to close these gaps must be seized.

Armida Salsiah Alisjahban is Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations and Executive Secretary of the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP).

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Undocumented Afghan Women Fear Eviction from Pakistan

Afghans living illegally in Pakistan have asked the authorities to reconsider their threat to evict them by November 1 because of the Taliban's attitude toward working women and education for girls. Credit: Ashfaq Yusufzai/IPS

Afghans living illegally in Pakistan have asked the authorities to reconsider their threat to evict them by November 1 because of the Taliban’s attitude toward working women and education for girls. Credit: Ashfaq Yusufzai/IPS

By Ashfaq Yusufzai
PESHAWAR, Oct 12 2023 – Amid a looming threat of forceful eviction, Afghan women who arrived in Pakistan after the Taliban’s takeover in Kabul have asked the host country to allow them to stay because they want to continue their education.

On October 4, Pakistan asked more than 1 million undocumented Afghans to leave by November 1 or face deportation or prison. The announcement has caused concern among the thousands of women and girls who arrived after the Taliban took power in Afghanistan in August 2021.

Floods, Now Torrential Monsoon Rains Leave Pakistani Women in Crisis

“We want the Pakistani authorities to show mercy towards women so that they could continue work here because sending them would expose them to brutalities back home,” Mushtari Bibi, 35, who arrived in Peshawar from Nangrahar province in January this year, told IPS.

Bibi is among thousands of women who left her native country after the Taliban banned working women in December 2022.

“I am not only concerned about my life, but my two daughters are studying here in a school because the Taliban has also banned female education,” she said. Bibi said she has also applied for asylum or settlement in a third country, but the process done by the UN agency in partnership with the NGO Society for Human Rights and Prisoners’ Aid (SHARP) is terribly slow.

Bibi stitches clothes and lives with her relatives.

A college student, Noor Mashal, told IPS she would never return to Afghanistan. Mashal, 17, a grade 12 student, left Kabul for Peshawar along with her parents when the Taliban banned women’s education last year.

“The entire world knows the Taliban’s human rights record, especially towards women. In Pakistan, women are doing odd jobs, and girls are studying in schools located in slum areas, which is far better than Afghanistan,” she said.

Pakistan has 2.18 million registered Afghan refugees. Of them, 1.3 million have Proof of Registration (PoR) cards, and 880,000 have Afghan Citizens Cards (ACCs). After the fall of Ashraf Ghani’s government in 2021, an estimated 800,000 came to Pakistan. More than 1 million don’t have valid documents.

Others who fled after the Taliban’s rule are former servicemen, human rights activists, singers, and musicians. Some arrived on valid visas, but mostly crossed into Pakistan without any travel documents.

Qaiser Khan Afridi, spokesperson for UNHCR, told IPS that Pakistan has remained a generous refugee host for decades. “UNHCR acknowledges and appreciates this hospitality and generosity. This role has been acknowledged globally, but more needs to be done to match its generosity by the international community,” Afridi said.

According to the UN refugee agency, any refugee return must be voluntary without any pressure to ensure protection for those seeking safety.

“UNHCR stands ready to support Pakistan in developing a mechanism to manage and register people in need of international protection on its territory and respond to particular vulnerabilities,” Afridi said.

An Afghan student who wished to be identified as Spogmay said Pakistan’s announcement regarding the eviction of refugees has also caused alarm among her classmates.

“My father sold his properties in Herat province at a throwaway price when the Taliban started their anti-women activities. We arrived in Nowshera district near Peshawar and lived with relatives who already lived there,” the 20-year-old student said.

Spogmay was studying computer science at Herat University in Afghanistan. She is now studying in a private academy.

My father has been selling vegetables to survive. “Going back to Afghanistan means sending us to the Stone Age because women have no education and work. What will we do except sit idle at home? We appreciate the hospitality of the host communities and expect the same from the government,” she said.

On October 3, caretaker interior minister Sarfaraz Ahmed Bugti said that since January this year, 24 terrorist attacks have occurred, and Afghan nationals were involved in 14 of these attacks.

More than half of the refugees live in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), one of Pakistan’s four provinces, close to Afghanistan. Afghan Taliban chief spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, said he doubted that the refugees were the cause of Pakistan’s security problems and described Pakistan’s “behaviour” towards Afghan refugees as “unacceptable” and urged Islamabad to reconsider its plan, saying if they were staying there voluntarily, Pakistan should “tolerate them.”

Civil society organisations and analysts want the government to review its decision as the country’s crackdown against illegal refugees is in progress.

Rahim Khan, a Peshawar-based political science teacher, told IPS that the government should deal with the terrorists with an iron hand but spare the women because the situation back home wasn’t worth living.

“It is common knowledge that most women have left Afghanistan because of the Taliban’s hostilities. Repatriating them forcefully or throwing them in jails is an utter violation of human rights,” Khan said.

Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said that refugees’ right to shelter, healthcare and legal counsel must be protected and slammed reports that Afghan refugee settlements were being razed and their occupants summarily evicted.

Maulana Fazlur Rehman, leader of Jamiat Ulemai Islam, a religious-political party, opposed the ongoing drive to repatriate Afghans.

He said even those with the requisite paperwork were being hauled away in an indiscriminate crackdown. “We cannot afford to strain ties with neighbours and a joint Pakistan-Afghanistan commission be formed to resolve the issue,” he said.

In a joint appeal posted on X (formerly Twitter), the UNHCR-IOM asked Pakistan to continue its protection of all vulnerable Afghans who have sought safety in the country and could be at imminent protection risk if forced to return.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Deriv s'engage dans une démarche de RSE axée sur les objectifs

CYBERJAYA, Malaisie, 12 oct. 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Deriv, l'entreprise de trading en ligne de premier plan reprsente dans 20 bureaux dans le monde, renforce son engagement en matire de responsabilit sociale des entreprises (RSE). travers son programme RSE Deriv Life , l'entreprise est dtermine faire une relle diffrence dans la socit et sur l'environnement, anime par son sens collectif de l'objectif.

Dans le cadre de son engagement en faveur de la responsabilit sociale des entreprises (RSE), Deriv a rcemment parrain une prothse pour le plus jeune lphant amput de Malaisie. Seema Hallon, directrice des ressources humaines chez Deriv, a soulign : Notre approche de la RSE va au–del des contributions financires. Elle fait partie intgrante de notre organisation. Nous envisageons Deriv Life comme une plateforme pour dfendre des causes qui cadrent avec nos valeurs et les convictions personnelles de chaque membre de la famille Deriv. Il est question d'agir collectivement, de faire rellement la diffrence.

Au cours de l'anne coule, Deriv a lanc diverses initiatives fort impact, notamment en parrainant une quipe participant au rallye 4L Trophy, ce qui a permis de collecter des fonds et d'offrir des fournitures scolaires de premire ncessit aux enfants dfavoriss du Maroc. Ces initiatives refltent l'engagement inbranlable de Deriv en faveur de la RSE, qui fait partie intgrante de son identit et de sa raison d'tre.

En collaboration avec une entreprise malaisienne de fabrication de prothses, Deriv a conu une patte artificielle ultramoderne pour Ellie, une lphante de 7 ans qui a perdu sa patte l'ge d'un an. Fabrique avec prcision en fibre de carbone durable et dote d'une base robuste en thylne–actate de vinyle (EVA), cette prothse innovante supporte non seulement le poids considrable d'Ellie, mais amliore aussi sa dmarche naturelle de manire significative. Yarham Hadeng, le concepteur de cette prothse, a dclar : Le parrainage de Deriv a rendu possible cette amlioration vitale, et nous sommes fiers de participer au remarquable processus de gurison d'Ellie.

Le personnel dvou de Deriv est activement engag dans l'expansion des efforts de RSE dans les bureaux de l'entreprise dans le monde, en mettant particulirement l'accent sur la satisfaction des besoins locaux et la promotion d'impacts sociaux et environnementaux positifs. L'entreprise reconnat qu'une RSE efficace est un processus continu et volutif, l'image de la trajectoire d'innovation et de croissance de Deriv. Selon Jean–Yves Sireau, PDG de Deriv, la RSE chez Deriv reprsente un engagement long terme en faveur de la responsabilit sociale et de l'amlioration des conditions de vie dans le monde. Notre objectif est de favoriser un changement durable mesure que nous progressons, guids par notre objectif commun.

Pour en savoir plus, visitez Deriv Life et le site Web de l'entreprise.

propos de Deriv

Depuis plus de deux dcennies, Deriv s'engage rendre le trading en ligne accessible tous, n'importe o. L'entreprise offre une large gamme de types de transactions et propose plus de 200 actifs sur des marchs tels que le Forex, les actions et les cryptomonnaies sur ses plateformes de trading intuitives. Avec un effectif de plus de 1 300 personnes rparties dans le monde, Deriv a cultiv un environnement ax qui met l'accent sur le bien–tre des employs, clbre les russites et encourage le dveloppement professionnel.

PRESS CONTACT
Aleksandra Zuzic
aleksandra@deriv.com

Une photo accompagnant ce communiqu est disponible au : https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/a40cd3ce–5dd6–4d26–9d99–b39780c614f8


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 1000843796)

Deriv Embarks on a Purpose-Driven CSR Journey

CYBERJAYA, Malaysia, Oct. 12, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Deriv, a leading online trading company with a global presence spanning 20 offices, is strengthening its commitment to Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). Through its CSR programme "Deriv Life', the company is dedicated to making a real difference in society and the environment, driven by its collective sense of purpose.

In its commitment to Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), Deriv recently sponsored a prosthetic limb for Malaysia's youngest elephant amputee. Seema Hallon, Chief Human Resources Officer at Deriv, emphasised, “Our approach to CSR goes beyond financial contributions. It's woven into who we are as an organisation. We envision Deriv Life as a platform for championing causes that resonate with our values and the personal beliefs of every member of the Deriv family. It's about collective action, making a real difference.”

Over the past year, Deriv has embarked on various impactful initiatives, including sponsoring a team in the 4L Trophy rally, which raised funds and provided essential school supplies to underprivileged children in Morocco. These initiatives reflect Deriv's unwavering commitment to CSR as an integral part of its identity and purpose.

In collaboration with a Malaysian prosthetics firm, Deriv engineered a state–of–the–art artificial leg for Ellie, a 7–year–old elephant who lost her front leg at the age of one. Crafted with precision from durable carbon fibre and featuring a robust ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) base, this innovative prosthetic not only supports Ellie's considerable weight but also significantly enhances her natural gait. Designer Yarham Hadeng remarked, “Deriv's sponsorship made this vital upgrade possible, and we're proud to be part of Ellie's remarkable journey to recovery.”

Deriv's dedicated workforce is actively engaged in expanding CSR efforts across the company's global offices, with a specific focus on addressing local needs and fostering positive social and environmental impacts. The company recognises that effective CSR is an ongoing and evolving journey, mirroring Deriv's own path of innovation and growth. In the words of Jean–Yves Sireau, Deriv CEO, “CSR at Deriv represents a long–term commitment to social responsibility and global betterment. Our aim is to drive sustainable change as we progress forward, guided by our shared purpose.”

To learn more, visit Deriv Life and the company website.

About Deriv

For over two decades, Deriv has been committed to making online trading accessible to anyone, anywhere. The company offers an expansive range of trade types and boasts over 200 assets across markets like forex, stocks, and cryptocurrencies on its intuitive trading platforms. With a workforce of more than 1,300 people globally, Deriv has cultivated an environment that focuses on employee well–being, celebrates achievements, and encourages professional growth.

PRESS CONTACT
Aleksandra Zuzic
aleksandra@deriv.com

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/a40cd3ce–5dd6–4d26–9d99–b39780c614f8


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 1000843796)

A Deriv embarca numa jornada de Responsabilidade Social Empresarial (RSE)

CYBERJAYA, Malásia, Oct. 12, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A Deriv, uma empresa lder de negociao online com presena global em 20 escritrios, est a fortalecer o seu compromisso com a Responsabilidade Social Empresarial (RSE). Atravs do seu programa de RSE “Deriv Life”, a empresa dedica–se a fazer a diferena na sociedade e no ambiente, impulsionada pelo seu sentido coletivo de propsito.

No seu compromisso com a Responsabilidade Social Empresarial (RSE), a Deriv patrocinou recentemente uma prtese para a mais jovem elefanta amputada da Malsia. Seema Hallon, Chefe de Recursos Humanos da Deriv, salientou: “A nossa abordagem RSE vai para alm das contribuies financeiras. Est enraizado no que somos enquanto organizao. Idealizamos a Deriv Life como uma plataforma para defender causas que refletem os nossos valores e as crenas pessoais de cada membro da famlia Deriv. Consiste numa ao colectiva, que faz uma verdadeira diferena”.

Ao longo do ltimo ano, a Deriv embarcou em vrias iniciativas impactantes, incluindo o patrocnio de uma equipa no rali 4L Trophy, que angariou fundos e ofereceu material escolar para crianas desfavorecidas em Marrocos. Estas iniciativas refletem o compromisso firme da Deriv com a RSE como parte integrante da sua identidade e propsito.

Em colaborao com uma empresa de prteses da Malsia, a Deriv projetou uma perna artificial de ltima gerao para a Ellie, uma elefanta de 7 anos que perdeu a pata da frente com apenas um ano de idade. Moldada com preciso a partir de fibra de carbono resistente e com uma base robusta de acetato de etileno vinilo (EVA), esta prtese inovadora no s suporta o peso considervel da Ellie, como tambm melhora significativamente o seu andar natural. O designer Yarham Hadeng referiu: “O patrocnio da Deriv tornou possvel esta otimizao vital e estamos orgulhosos por fazer parte do incrvel percurso de recuperao da Ellie.”

A equipa responsvel da Deriv est ativamente empenhada em alargar os esforos de RSE nos escritrios globais da empresa, com especial foco na resposta s necessidades locais e ambientais. A empresa reconhece que uma RSE eficaz uma jornada contnua em evoluo, refletindo o prprio percurso de inovao e crescimento da Deriv. Segundo Jean–Yves Sireau, CEO da Deriv, “A RSE na Deriv representa um compromisso a longo prazo com a responsabilidade social e a melhoria global. O nosso objetivo promover uma mudana sustentvel medida que avanamos, guiados pelo nosso objetivo comum.”

Para saber mais, visite a Deriv Life e o site da empresa.

Sobre a Deriv

H mais de duas dcadas, a Deriv tem o compromisso de tornar a negociao online acessvel a qualquer pessoa, em qualquer lugar. A empresa dispe de uma vasta gama de tipos de negociao e apresenta mais de 200 ativos em mercados como forex, aes e criptomoedas nas suas plataformas de negociao intuitivas. Com mais de 1300 funcionrios em todo o mundo, a Deriv tem cultivado um ambiente que se concentra no bem–estar dos funcionrios, celebra as conquistas e incentiva o crescimento profissional.

CONTACTO DE IMPRENSA
Aleksandra Zuzic
aleksandra@deriv.com

Foto deste comunicado disponvel em https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/a40cd3ce–5dd6–4d26–9d99–b39780c614f8


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 1000843796)

Maldives Election: What Now for Civil Society?

Credit: Mohamed Afrah/AFP via Getty Images

By Andrew Firmin
LONDON, Oct 12 2023 – Ahead of the presidential election, Solih faced accusations of irregularities in his party’s primary vote, in which he defeated former president Mohamed Nasheed. The Electoral Commission was accused of making it harder for rival parties to stand, including the Democrats, a breakaway party Naheed formed after the primary vote. The ruling party also appeared to be instrumentalising public media and state resources in its favour. Solih’s political alliances with conservative religious parties were in the spotlight, including with the Adhaalath Party, which has taken an increasingly intolerant stance on women’s and LGBTQI+ rights.

Big beasts battle for influence

If the two candidates seemed similar in their attitudes towards civil society, they stood on opposite sides of a geopolitical divide. In recent years Maldives, a chain of small Indian Ocean islands with a population of around half a million, has become a major site of contestation in the battle for supremacy between China and India. The location is seen as strategic, not least for control of shipping routes, vital for the transport of oil from the Gulf to China.

 

Civic space under pressure

Solih quickly conceded defeat and thanked voters for playing their part in a democratic and peaceful process. It’s far from rare for incumbents to lose in Maldives: there’s been a change at every election since the first multiparty vote in 2008. But there are concerns that Muizzu will follow the same course as former president Abdulla Yameen, leader of his party, the People’s National Congress.

Yameen, in office from 2013 to 2018, wanted to run again, but the Supreme Court barred him because he’s serving an 11-year jail sentence for corruption and money-laundering. Critics question the extent to which Muizzu will be his own person or a proxy for Yameen. Perhaps there’s a clue in the fact that Yameen has already been moved from jail to house arrest on Muizzu’s request.

The question matters because the human rights situation sharply deteriorated under Yameen’s presidency. The 2018 election was preceded by the declaration of a state of emergency enabling a crackdown on civil society, the media, the judiciary and the political opposition. Judges and politicians were jailed. Protests were routinely banned and violently dispersed. Independent media websites were blocked and journalists subjected to physical attacks.

Ultimately, Yameen was roundly defeated by a united opposition who capitalised on widespread alarm at the state of human rights. Some positive developments followed, including repeal of a criminal defamation law. But many challenges for civil society remained and hopes of significant progress were largely disappointed.

A restrictive protest law stayed in effect and parliament rejected changing it in 2020. Police violence towards protesters continued, as did impunity. Civil society groups were still smeared and vilified if they criticised the government. Activists have been subjected to smears, harassment, threats and violence from hardline conservative religious groups. Women’s rights activists have been particularly targeted.

In 2019, a prominent civil society organisation, the Maldivian Democracy Group, was deregistered and had its funds seized following pressure from religious groups after it published a report on violent extremism. It now operates from exile.

Ahead of the presidential election, Solih faced accusations of irregularities in his party’s primary vote, in which he defeated former president Mohamed Nasheed. The Electoral Commission was accused of making it harder for rival parties to stand, including the Democrats, a breakaway party Naheed formed after the primary vote. The ruling party also appeared to be instrumentalising public media and state resources in its favour. Solih’s political alliances with conservative religious parties were in the spotlight, including with the Adhaalath Party, which has taken an increasingly intolerant stance on women’s and LGBTQI+ rights.

Big beasts battle for influence

If the two candidates seemed similar in their attitudes towards civil society, they stood on opposite sides of a geopolitical divide. In recent years Maldives, a chain of small Indian Ocean islands with a population of around half a million, has become a major site of contestation in the battle for supremacy between China and India. The location is seen as strategic, not least for control of shipping routes, vital for the transport of oil from the Gulf to China.

India has historically had close connections with Maldives, something strongly supported by Solih. But Muizzu, like his predecessor Yameen, seems firmly in the China camp. Under Yameen, Maldives was a recipient of Chinese support to develop infrastructure under its Belt and Road Initiative, epitomised in the 1.4 km China-Maldives Friendship Bridge.

India has come to be a big issue in Maldivian politics. Under Solih, India established a small military presence in Maldives, mostly involved in providing air support for medical evacuations from isolated islands. But the development of a new India-funded harbour prompted accusations that the government was secretly planning to give India’s military a permanent base.

This sparked opposition protests calling for the Indian military to be expelled. Protests faced heavy restriction, with many protesters arrested. In 2022, Solih issued a decree deeming the protests a threat to national security and ordering them to stop. This high-handed move only further legitimised protesters’ grievances.

Muizzu’s campaign sought to centre the debate on foreign interference and Maldives’ sovereignty. He used his victory rally to reiterate his promise that foreign soldiers will be expelled.

In practice, the new administration is likely to mean a change of emphasis rather than an absolute switch. Maldives will still need to trade with both much bigger economies and likely look to play them off against each other, while India will seek to maintain relations, hoping that the political pendulum will swing its way again.

Time to break with the past

International relations were far from the only issue. Economic strife and the high cost of living – a common issue in recent elections around the world – was a major concern. And some people likely switched votes out of unhappiness with Solih’s failure to fulfil his 2018 promises to challenge impunity for killings by extremists and make inroads on corruption, and to open up civic space.

Neither India, where civic freedoms are deteriorating, nor China, which stamps down on all forms of dissent, will have any interest in whether the Maldives government respects the space for civil society. But there’s surely an opportunity here for Muizzu to prove he’ll stand on his own feet by breaking with both the dismal human rights approach of Yameen and the increasingly compromised positions of Solih. He can carve out his own direction by committing to respecting and working with civil society, including by letting it scrutinise and give feedback on the big development decisions he may soon be taking in concert with China.

Andrew Firmin is CIVICUS Editor-in-Chief, co-director and writer for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.

 


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WORLD FOOD DAY 2023

By External Source
Oct 12 2023 (IPS-Partners)

 
Water is essential for life on Earth.

It makes up 50% of our human bodies.

It covers about 70% of the planet’s surface.

It is the foundation of our food.

But only 2.5% of this planetary resource is fresh water.

This is the only water suitable for drinking and agriculture.

72% of global freshwater withdrawals are tied to agriculture.

But like all natural resources, our fresh water supply is limited.

Rapid population growth, urbanization and climate change put water resources under increasing stress.

Freshwater resources per person have declined by 20% over the past decades.

Water availability and quality are deteriorating fast.

Poor management, over extraction of groundwater, pollution and climate change exacerbate this.

Around 600 million people who depend on aquatic food systems are suffering from the effects.

We are stretching this resource to a point of no return.

Right now, 2.4 billion people live in water-stressed countries.

Many are smallholder farmers who already struggle to meet their daily needs.

Women, Indigenous Peoples, migrants and refugees are particularly impacted.

Competition for this priceless resource continues to grow.

And water scarcity is now an ever-increasing cause of conflict.

It’s time to start managing water wisely.

We need to produce food and agricultural commodities with less water.

We need to ensure that water is distributed equally.

And we need to preserve aquatic food systems so that nobody is left behind.

The Taliban’s War on Women: The Ongoing Struggle in Afghanistan

The man dressed in white represents the Ministry for Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice. His presence causes fear on the emptying streets of Kabul. Credit: Learning Together

The man dressed in white represents the Ministry for Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice. His presence causes fear on the emptying streets of Kabul. Credit: Learning Together

By External Source
Oct 12 2023 – Afghanistan can be likened to an open prison, where nearly 20 million women struggle daily for their freedom. What these women demand is a simple right – the right to lead dignified lives, equal to their male counterparts. Unfortunately, this aspiration seems distant and despairingly unattainable.

Ever since the Taliban swept back to power in Afghanistan two years ago, the treatment meted out to women is a reflection of how they are viewed in society: “imperfect mind, incompetent, weak, and should be under the control and administration of a man”, says Abdul Hakim Haqqani, the head of the Supreme Court.

In his new book, titled, “Islamic Emirate and the System”, published by the Taliban, Haqqani considers women as mainly meant to produce children for the continuity of generations.

Education, work outside the home, and social and cultural activities of women, which are considered their basic rights, have been declared blasphemous and contrary to the divine system that they themselves believe in.

However, in the divine system that we Muslims are familiar with, studying is mandatory for both men and women.

Under the Taliban’s rule, women are banned from attending school and university; are not allowed to sit around in parks; women’s gyms are shuttered. Even the sound of music is prohibited at wedding ceremonies.

Women are also denied access to justice in Taliban courts for crimes like theft and rape unless filed through a male guardian. Those who dare to protest their fundamental rights face arrest, forced confessions under brutal torture, and, if their crime is considered serious, as judged by the Taliban, they are stoned or shot in public.

A few examples follow as testimony to the Taliban’s violent and heinous acts against women.

Last a year, a district court in Badakhshan province sentenced a woman and a man to be stoned to death. Their crime was their desire to live together.

Celebrating Mother’s Day is declared a crime by the Taliban, and a group of women paid dearly in May this year. A trip to the shop in Kabul to buy cakes for the celebration ended them being thrown into the back of Ranger car by armed men.

They were driven to an unknown place and not heard of since. Eyewitnesses said no one could approach to help the women by asking why they were arrested. Their loved ones are anxiously waiting for their return.

Zainab Abdul Hai, another young girl was shot dead by the Taliban at a checkpoint while returning from a wedding party. The reason, according to the Taliban, was not wearing a full hijab.

I myself also fell victim to the enforced restrictions put in place by the Taliban. Although I was fully covered in a hijab, I was interrogated for 20 minutes by an armed group at a checkpoint in Shah Do Shamshire just because a few strands of hair could be seen under my hijab.

As I was crossing the road after my release, the stare of accusation and mocking laughter felt like a sword sunk deep into my soul.

 

Today in Afghanistan, simply walking the streets has become an arduous and nearly impossible task for women. Credit: Learning Together

Today in Afghanistan, simply walking the streets has become an arduous and nearly impossible task for women. Credit: Learning Together

Twenty-nine-year-old Ruqiyeh Sai was among a group of women protesting for their right to work and for their daughters to go to school. In the space of three months in 2022 and 2023, she was arrested twice by the Taliban and tortured in a dreaded torture centre.

Ruqiyeh, told Nimrokh magazine in an interview: “One of them punched me, the other kicked me, and another one hit me with a water pipe. “They cursed me”, ‘to which country did you sell yourself, you prostitute? For whom do you spy?’ “I passed out under their torture,” she said.

Ruqiyeh Sai was released from prison with a guarantee from the elders and a promise to the Taliban not to protest anymore. Nevertheless, she was video-recorded and threatened to be stoned to death if she raised her voice again.

“I was very confused, and I am still confused to the extent that sometimes I think of suicide, but when I see my children, I abandon the thought”, she said. Ruqiyeh has since fled to Pakistan with her children.

Suicide among Afghan women has increased since the Taliban returned to power, according to a UN Report. It is mainly due to depression stemming from the severe crackdown on women and girls’ human rights, especially since many have been forced to abandon their education.

However, women and girls’ suicide is not widely reported due to the Taliban’s clamp down on the press.

Women’s voices are also silenced over the radio. In their latest decree the Taliban have ordered that if a woman’s voice is heard over the radio – whether as a presenter or even in commercials – the owner of that radio station would be punished.

In essence, the Taliban today mirrors the oppressive regime of two decades ago, perpetuating the suffering of Afghan women.

Excerpt:

The author is an Afghanistan-based female journalist, trained with Finnish support before the Taliban take-over. Her identity is withheld for security reasons